. Composition, biophysical properties, and morphometry of plasma membranes in pulmonary interstitial edema. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 282: L1382-L1390, 2002. First published February 1, 2002 10.1152/ajplung.00447.2001.-We evaluated the changes in plasma membrane composition, biophysical properties, and morphology of pulmonary endothelial cells in anesthetized rabbits receiving 0.5 ml ⅐ kg Ϫ1 ⅐ min Ϫ1 saline infusion for 180 min, causing mild interstitial edema. Plasma membrane fractions were obtained from lung homogenates with gradient centrifugation, allowing a sixfold enrichment in caveolin-1. In edematous lungs, cholesterol content and phospholipidic phosphorus increased by 15 and 40%, respectively. These data correlated with morphometric analysis of lungs fixed in situ by vascular perfusion with 2.5% glutaraldehyde, suggesting a relative increase in surface of luminal to interstitial front of the capillary endothelial cells, due to a convoluted luminal profile. In edematous lungs, the fraction of double-bound fatty acids increased in membrane lipids; moreover, the phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine and the cholesterol/phospholipid ratios decreased. These changes were consistent with the increase in fluorescence anisotropy of plasma membrane, indicating an increase in its fluidity. Data suggest that mechanical stimuli elicited by a modest (ϳ4%) increase in extravascular water cause marked changes in plasma membranes that may be of relevance in signal transduction and endothelial cell activation. rabbit; air-blood barrier; endothelial cells; membrane composition and fluidity THE ALVEOLAR AND CAPILLARY walls delimit the pulmonary interstitium, a thin compartment made of a fiber system, serving as a scaffold, and other macromolecules forming the capillary and the alveolar basement membranes. Extravascular water is distributed within the interstitial compartment of the air-blood barrier and is physiologically kept at a minimum volume to optimize gas diffusion. Recent work, based on an experimental model causing a mild form of pulmonary interstitial edema, allowed us to describe the mechanisms contributing to a tight control of extravascular lung volume in the air-blood barrier (6,20). These studies also showed that, despite a remarkable resistance of the pulmonary tissue to edema formation, the increase in interstitial fluid volume occurs as a consequence of fragmentation of proteoglycans, important macromolecules of the extracellular matrix (24,25,31,32) controlling microvascular permeability and tissue mechanical resistance. We wished to further investigate the condition of mild interstitial edema because it represents a critical equilibrium between matrix degradation and deposition provided by cellular activation. We focused on cellular involvement in mild interstitial edema, particularly on the composition and fluidity of plasma membranes that are known to be sensitive to alterations in chemical and physical stimuli of the environment surrounding the cells (34, 36). MATERIALS AND METHODS C...
We evaluated in anesthetized rabbits the compositional changes of plasmalemmal lipid microdomains from lung tissue samples after inducing pulmonary interstitial edema (0.5 ml/kg for 3 h, leading to approximately 5% increase in extravascular water). Lipid microdomains (lipid rafts and caveolae) were present in the detergent-resistant fraction (DRF) obtained after discontinuous sucrose density gradient. DRF was enriched in caveolin-1, flotillin, aquaporin-1, GM1, cholesterol, sphingomyelin, and phosphatidylserine, and their contents significantly increased in interstitial edema. The higher DRF content in caveolin, flotillin, and aquaporin-1 and of the ganglioside GM1 suggests an increase both in caveolar domains and in lipid rafts, respectively. Compositional changes could be ascribed to endothelial and epithelial cells that provide most of plasma membrane surface area in the air-blood barrier. Alterations in lipid components in the plasma membrane may reflect rearrangement of floating lipid platforms within the membrane and/or lipid translocation from intracellular stores. Lipid traffic could be stimulated by the marked increase in hydraulic interstitial pressure after initial water accumulation, from approximately -10 to 5 cmH2O, due to the low compliance of the pulmonary tissue, in particular in the basement membranes and in the interfibrillar substance. Compositional changes in lipid microdomains represent a sign of cellular activation and suggest the potential role of mechanotransduction in response to developing interstitial edema.
We studied responses of endothelial and epithelial cells in the thin portion of the air-blood barrier to a rise in interstitial pressure caused by an increase in extravascular water (interstitial edema) obtained in anesthetized rabbits receiving saline infusion (0.5 ml.kg(-1).min(-1) for 3 h). We obtained morphometric analyses of the cells and of their microenvironment (electron microscopy); furthermore, we also studied in lung tissue extracts the biochemical alterations of proteins responsible for signal transduction (PKC, caveolin-1) and cell-cell adhesion (CD31) and of proteins involved in membrane-to-cytoskeleton linkage (alpha-tubulin and beta-tubulin). In endothelial cells, we observed a folding of the plasma membrane with an increase in cell surface area, a doubling of plasmalemma vesicular density, and an increase in cell volume. Minor morphological changes were observed in epithelial cells. Edema did not affect the total plasmalemma amount of PKC, beta-tubulin, and caveolin-1, but alpha-tubulin and CD-31 increased. In edema, the distribution of these proteins changed between the detergent-resistant fraction of the plasma membrane (DRF, lipid microdomains) and the rest of the plasma membrane [high-density fractions (HDFs)]. PKC and tubulin isoforms shifted from the DRF to HDFs in edema, whereas caveolin-1 increased in DRF at the expense of a decrease in phosphorylated caveolin-1. The changes in cellular morphology and in plasma membrane composition suggest an early endothelial response to mechanical stimuli arising at the interstitial level subsequently to a modest (approximately 5%) increase in extravascular water.
Mild pulmonary interstitial edema was shown to cause fragmentation of interstitial matrix proteoglycans. We therefore studied compartmental fluid accumulation by light and electron microscopy on lungs of anesthetized rabbits fixed in situ by vascular perfusion after 0.5 ml.kg(-1).min(-1) iv saline infusion for 180 min causing approximately 6% increase in lung weight. Morphometry showed that a relevant portion (44%) of extravascular fluid is detected early in the alveolar septa, 85% of this fluid accumulating in the thick portion of the air-blood barrier. The arithmetic mean thickness of the barrier increased in interstitial edema from 1.06 +/- 0.05 (SE) to 1.33 +/- 0.06 microm. The harmonic mean thickness increased from 0.6 +/- 0.03 to 0.86 +/- 0.07 microm, mostly due to thickening of the thin portion causing an increase in gas diffusion resistance. Despite some structural damage, the air-blood barrier displays a relatively high structural resistance providing a safety factor against the development of severe edema. It is suggested that the increase in extra-alveolar perivascular space occurs as a consequence of fluid accumulation in the air-blood barrier.
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